Title: The True Health Effects of Radiation
1The True Health Effects of Radiation
- Presented by Y. C. Luan
- On behalf the 14 authors from
- Nuclear Science and Technology Association
- NBC contamination prevention Society
- and three Universities
2 Abstract
- . Health effects of radiation depend on the
circumstances or the dose-rate of radiation being
received. - . Radiation might be classified into acute and
chronic exposure radiation. - . Health effects of acute and chronic exposure
radiation are contradicting each other. - . Acute radiation is mostly harmful to people,
but Chronic radiation is always beneficial to
people.
3 Introduction-1
- 1. The health effects of radiation depend on the
circumstances or dose rate of radiation being
received. - 2. Acute radiation is radiation received
instantaneously in high dose rate in a short
period of time. - 3. Chronic radiation is the radiation received
continuously in low dose rate in long time. - 4. Chronic radiation, though is feared as acute
radiation, is actually beneficial to people. - 5. Chronic radiation was serendipitously
observed to be always beneficial to humans from
the incident of Co-60 contaminated apartments in
Taiwan.
4 Introduction-2
- 6. Health effects of acute and chronic
radiation are entirely different 86,572 atomic
bomb survivors in Japan had 5.4 cancer
mortality increasing in 40 years but 10,000
irradiated residents in Taiwan had 97 cancer
mortality decreasing. - 7. 31 Chernobyl firemen and workers received
acute radiation from fission products died
workers and public outside of plant were
benefited when fission products diluted and
decayed to chronic radiation,.
5 Introduction-3
- 8. The chronic radiation experienced in
Taiwan, might be used in preventing of cancers
and hereditary diseases. - 9. Traditional radiation protection should be
revised for promoting the nuclear energy
application. - 10. Fearing of chronic radiation should be
abolished, spending of billions dollars for
radiation protection should be saved.
6The health effects of acute radiation
- 1. Deterministic effects of the acute radiation
could cause radiation sickness and death. - 2. Stochastic effects of acute radiation could
increase cancer mortality as described in
ICRP-60. - 3. LNT hypothesis implies that all radiation are
harmful, the effects of low dose could be
extrapolated from the high dose based on LNT
model. - 4. LNT model of ICRP is simple, logical, and
conservative for governing of the radiation
protection. - 5. But the LNT model is not appropriate for
doseslt100 mSv. -
7The health effects of chronic radiation
- 1. Radiation from natural background is chronic
radiation. - 2. Radiation received by workers, and
occasionally by public from the nuclear power
plants, is also chronic radiation. - 3. Chronic radiation with doses lower than 100
mSv, should be less harmful physiologically and
pathologically than the same dose of acute
radiation. - 4. Dr. Sternglass and other scientists claimed
in 1960s chronic radiation had same or even more
harmful effects than the acute radiation. - 5. Radiation is thus to be always afraid by
people.
8The controversy of radiation health effects-1
- 1. LNT model was mainly derived from the leukemia
deaths at high doses of acute radiation cohort
of 905 survivors (1 of total 86,572) with dose
in gt2 Sv, leukemia mortality increased 14 times
cohort of 2819 survivors (3.2 of total 86.572
)with dose gt1 Sv, leukemia deaths increased 5
times of the public. Two cohorts of 32915 and
5613 survivors ( 44.5 of total 86,572) with dose
in 5 mSv-100 mSv, had no excess but less leukemia
deaths based on LNT.
9The controversy of radiation health effects-2
- 2. The survivors received doses lt 100 mSv, had
no excess cancer deaths as LNT predicated, LNT
model is not appropriate for low dose acute
radiation. - 3. Preston et al 2003 RERF report had more data,
but no new results obtained. - 4. Dr Sohei Kondo, professor emeritus of Osaka
University, asserted low acute radiation from
atomic explosion could reduce the cancer
mortality, and increase life span. - 5. Both ANS and HPS had statements of 50 mSv/y
or 100 mSv whole life would be unnecessary to
evaluate the individual radiation risk.
10A radiological incident in Taiwan revealed
chronic radiation is always beneficial to
humans-1
- 1. Epidemiological studies of people in the
higher natural background radiation areas in
Kerala, India, Yangjing, China and Mountain
States in USA, had lower cancer deaths. And
higher doses received by nuclear workers in many
countries had received higher doses but had lower
cancer deaths These results have still not
accepted as human data in proving chronic
radiation is beneficial to people by all
regulatory communities until today. - 2. The incredible Co-60 contaminated apartments
incident 20 years ago in Taiwan, did not show
harmful effects to people, but serendipitously
revealed it was beneficial to them.
11A radiological incident in Taiwan revealed
chronic radiation is always beneficial to
humans-2
- 3. A Co-60 source was mixed in the metal scrap,
melted and drawn into steel bars which used
finally in construction of 1700 apartments for
about 10,000 residents in 1082-84. The first
apartment was discovered in 1992, the residents
irradiated at least for 9 years, long up to 20
years. The annual dose in the first year 1983 was
close to 50 mSv/y, high up to 600 mSv/y. The
total averaged dose was about 0.4 mSv, and high
up to 6 Sv.
12A radiological incident in Taiwan revealed
chronic radiation is always beneficial to
humans-3
- 4. The total doses cumulated in 20 years were
higher than the average doses received by the
atomic bomb survivors in Japan, and the Russian
recovery workers in Chernobyl accident. If LNT
model is appropriate for chronic radiation, the
excessive doses could induce at least 35 excess
leukemia and 35 solid cancer deaths in 20 years,
actually none of such deaths observed, on the
contrary, the spontaneous cancer deaths of the
residents of about 232 in 20 years based on the
vital statistics in Taiwan, but reduced to only
7, or 3 of the general population, as shown in
the following curve plotted by Luan et al since
1983.
13A radiological incident in Taiwan revealed
chronic radiation is always beneficial to
humans-4
14A radiological incident in Taiwan revealed
chronic radiation is always beneficial to humans-5
- 5. The radiation could reduce hereditary
malfunctions of the descendants of the residents
was also observed, 46 based on LNT and 21 on
congenital, but reduced to 3, or 6.5 of the
general public. - 6. No harmful health effects chronic radiation
observed in cytogenetic analysis. - 7. As the doses received from the natural
background and the peaceful uses of nuclear
energy are seldom bigger than the doses received
in the Co-60 incident, it meant any chronic
radiation is always beneficial to humans.
15A radiological incident in Taiwan revealed
chronic radiation is always beneficial to humans-6
- 8. The beneficial health effects of radiation
observed in the Taiwan was coincidental to the
theory of Dr. T.D. Luckey and his Complete
Dose-Response Curve 100 mSv/y is optimum to
human health, 10 Sv/y is still in hormetic range.
- 9. The chronic radiation is always to humans was
discovered by a group independent and
knowledgeable scientists and published the
reports in many international conferences and
journals.
16Most radiation is chronic radiation and
beneficial to humans
- 1. Nuclear power plants, and related facilities,
usually equipped with safety design and
shielding, the nuclear workers and public could
receive only chronic radiation. - 2. The doses of chronic radiation received by the
nuclear energy and public would be never higher
than 50 mSv/y, so that it is always beneficial to
them. - 3. Population in the higher natural background
areas have always lower cancer mortality. - 4. Beneficial effects of chronic radiation should
be accepted by scientists, communities and
regulation authorities.
17Out of control Radioactive source is still risky
- 1. The health effects of chronic radiation from
Co-60 incident in Taiwan were serendipitously
observed beneficial to humans, but most incident
of out of control of Co-60, Cs-137 or other
isotope is still harmful, even could kill people.
- 2. There were quite number of people killed out
of control incidences in Mexico, China, Brazil
and in Tailand. - 3. A big out of control incident of Co-50 in
Mexico 1984, but no people were killed and the
contaminated steel bars shipped to USA were
shortly identified and recovered. - 4. The out of control incident in Taiwan was an
unique case showed the true health effects of
radiation.
18The health effects of radiation from the
Chernobyl accident-1
- 1. The Chernobyl accident emits both acute
radiation and chronic radiation, - 2. Chernobyl accident was considered to be a
catastrophe, to frighten all people in the
world but was also a good opportunity to observe
the health effects of radiation. - 3. When the meltdown high radioactive fission
products released abruptly into the reactor hall,
31 firemen and workers received high doses of
acute radiation in a short time, just like the
radiation received by atomic bomb survivors.
19The health effects of radiation from the
Chernobyl accident-2
- 4. The radiation received in Chernobyl accident
was longer time and consisted of not only gamma,
but beta and alpha. the dose rate was about 1
Gy/hr on April 26, 1986, but high enough to kill
people. - 5. When Fission products dispersed and deposited
on spacious ground, highly diluted and decayed of
its radioactivity to one tenth every seven-fold
time lapses, 49 hours later would decrease to
about 1, 10 mGy/r. - 6. So that in a few days after the accident, the
acute radiation from fission products turned to
be chronic radiation, and beneficial to the public
20The chronic radiation from the accident is
harmless-1
- 1. 200,000 Russian workers engaged for
decontamination received an average dose of about
100 mSv, followed-up by the International
Chernobyl Project (ICP) under the supervision of
the IAEA and WHO. - 2. The ICP predicated that 150 leukemia deaths
in ten years after the accident based on LNT
model. But none of such results were observed and
reported so in the one decade after Chernobyl
conference co-sponsored by the EC, IAEA and WHO,
held in Vienna in 1996 7 - 3. There were also no such results described in
UNSCEAR 2000 annul report to the General Assembly
21The chronic radiation from the accident is
harmless-2
- 4. These reports meant that emergency workers
and the evacuated public suffer no excess solid
cancer deaths, though they had received quite
amount of radiation. - 5. A severe nuclear accident like Chernobyl could
only harm only few workers in the reactor hall,
could not harm workers and public outside of
power plants. - 6. Both reports indicated quite amount of thyroid
cancer incidences observed among the children,
but no proper control cohort for exact comparison
of thyroid cancer deaths of the children under
the ages of 18.
22Most radiation from accident is chronic radiation
and beneficial to people-1
- 1. Russian specialists from the national science
and medical academy followed the health results
of the workers with their own RNMDR system, and
the summary report sent to IAEA as a letter to
the IAEA BULLTIN editor ( IAEA BULLETIN 42/4/2000
) They found cancer deaths of the emergency
workers were statistically lower than the control
public, 48 leukoses cases verified among the
180.000 emergency workers in 14 years
(1986-2000).
23Most radiation from accident is chronic radiation
and beneficial to people-2
- 2. Assuming Russian workers in particular age
had the same spontaneous leukemia mortality of
the Japanese ( the cancer of total population is
found often close to male in the ages of 20-50),
their spontaneous leukemia deaths of the workers
should be about 118 (180,000/86,572x162 x14/40
118) - 3. And assuming also they had the similar
cancer mortality of the population in Taiwan in
200 persons/100,000 person-years (ages in 34-64),
and leukemia in about 2.6 of all caners, The
Russian workers should be at least 131
(200/100,000 x180,000x.026x14 131).
24Most radiation from accident is chronic radiation
and beneficial to people-3
- 4. Even 48 leukose incidences meant leukemia
death, it was lower for Russian workers. - 5. Only the cancer deaths decreased in the
Russian paper was attributed to healthy worker
effects and better medical care. - 6. What did healthy worker effect and
better medical care mean? If these could be
clarified as not dominant, or the cancer deaths
of the workers in a big number, it could be
concluded that the chronic radiation from
Chernobyl accident is beneficial to the emergency
workers, and to public in the fallout areas in
the world
25Follow-up study of Chernobyl workers revealed
chronic radiation also beneficial-1
- 1. 65,905 emergency workers with external doses
averaged in 100 mSv were followed by Russia
Academy of Medical Science and reported in 2001
HPJ. - 2. The report indicated that the all causes
death mortality is in 0.6-0.9, average in 0.82
lower than the the public. - 3. The cancer mortality of the workers in 1998
was in 110 persons /100,000 person-years, and the
total cancer deaths were 515 observed in 8 years
(1991-1998). - 4. There was no comparison with Russian public
reported. Assuming the workers had same cancer
deaths as the Japanese, the cancer deaths should
be about 1102 (65,905/86,572x7244 x8/401102)
26Follow-up study of Chernobyl workers revealed
chronic radiation might be also beneficial-2
- 5. Assuming the workers ( In ages of about
36-66) has similar spontaneous cancer mortality
as population in Taiwan of 200 persons/100,000
person-year, the cancer deaths of the workers was
about 1054 ( 200 /100,000 x 65,905 x8 1054) - 6. 515 cancer deaths among 4995 total deaths in
8 years, was only 10, seemed too low in
comparing with most countries of about 25 . it
should be over 1000. - 7. Peter Fong predicated in his paper to
Chernobyl conference after one decay in 1996,
3,000,000 cancer deaths might be prevented (not
officially disclosed).
27Follow-up study of Chernobyl workers revealed
chronic radiation might be also beneficial-3
- 8. The study by Russia Medical Academy indicated
also the lower mortality might be attributed to
the Healthy worker effects and the incomplete
data collection. if these uncertainty factors
could be clarified as not dominant, the health
effects of chronic radiation from accidents
should be globally recognized. - 9. A nuclear accident might be only harmful to
the workers inside of reactor hall, but
beneficial to the workers and public outside the
reactor. The public should also not fear of
nuclear accident.
28Conclusion and remarks-1
- 1. Chronic radiation is different to acute
radiation and always beneficial to humans were
serendipitously observed in Taiwan. - 2. The cancer mortality induced to humans by
acute radiation is hard to discerned from the the
spontaneous cancers, which often in big number
and has long latent period but people has the
highest cancer death rate, and the chronic
radiation could strongly immune it, it could be
easily identified in an epidemiological study. - 3. The incident of the Co-60 contamination had
incidentally indicated chronic radiation could
effective immunize the cancers as a vaccine.
29Conclusion and remarks-2
- 4. There were no evidence indicating hereditary
defects could be caused by acute radiation but
the chronic could prevent the defects. - 5. The beneficial health effects of chronic
radiation observed in Taiwan was limited to the
low LET gamma radiation to whole body exposure.
High LET radiation from radioactive material or
internal contamination of Alpha and Beta has also
beneficial effects observed in animal tests.
30Conclusion and remarks-3
- 6. Atomic bomb explosion in Japan produced also
big quantity of radioactive substances (fission
products), but evaporated immediately to the
stratosphere, and became of global fallout, then
gradually deposited on the ground in the world,
which is also known as chronic radiation, and
beneficial to people. - 7. Dr Peter Fong ever studied the fallout from
the US atmosphere nuclear tests which did not
increase but prevent millions of cancer deaths of
Americans.
31Conclusion and remarks-4
- 8. Chronic radiation exposed to the workers and
public from the nuclear power plants is similar
to the radiation exposed to the residents in the
Co-60 contamination in Taiwan, only in smaller
doses, so that it is surely also beneficial to
them. - 9. People receive the natural background
radiation every day, and people in higher natural
background areas often receive higher doses than
the nuclear workers, so that natural radiation is
essential to human beings.
32Conclusion and remarks-5
- 10. The public in suburb of the nuclear power
plants, should never fear of radiation but
welcome it, even in accident. - 11. Governmental radiation protection measures
should not be strictly conducted based LNT model,
and nuclear energy should be considered as the
most safe energy. - 12. A nuclear accident could occasionally incur,
only its acute radiation could harm a few
workers, and they could be avoided with some
reasonable procedure.
33Conclusion and remarks-6
- 13. Cancer deaths and hereditary defects are the
disastrous and miserable sickness, it is now
known that it could be prevented by chronic
radiation in proper doses. - 14. Numerous animal tests in many countries
indicated the dose rate gt 1mSv/hr were beneficial
to the animals. And authors in our study had
purposely to test the health of mice with dose
rate gt1 mSv/hr which showed also healthy results
to mice.
34Conclusion and remarks-7
- 15. The incident of Co-60 contamination in Taiwan
showed that many residents living in 1 mSv/hr
apartments in 1983 was still be healthy. - 16. This paper tentatively suggests lt1 mSv/hr as
the acceptable dose rate limit of chronic
radiation. If a person lives all year in such
radioactive environment, he might receive many Sv
in one year, which is still in the beneficial
range of Luckeys dose-effect curve, though it
might not be the optimum dose rate to health.
35Conclusion and remarks-8
- 18. Many studies indicated beneficial health
effects of chronic radiation could be useful in
cancer therapies, enhance of immune system,
activation of gene p53, suppress diabetes, AIDS
and for pain relief etc. Such studies are
valuable to human beings, should be further
studied.
36 Recommendation-1
- 1. The findings in the Co-60 incident could be
regarded as more important than the findings
obtained in the atomic bomb explosion in Japan,
but they need more studies by the international
scientists and communities, especially on the
mechanism of the beneficial effects, and
communicate the entire world of the results to
the medical and nuclear energy applications. - 2. From the experiences obtained from the
incident of Co-60 contamination, and the
beneficial effects observed in the Chernobyl
accident, the conventional radiation protection
should be revised for elevating application of
nuclear energy.
37 Recommendation-2
- 3. This paper tentatively recommended
the1mSv/hr and 1 Sv/y as the acceptable hourly
and annually dose rate limit for the nuclear
energy workers and the public. The 50 mSv as the
optimum annual doses to people, - 4. The emergency plans for the nuclear reactor
accidents and for out of control of radioactive
sources of course should be also revised. - 5. As cancers and hereditary defects are the
miserable sicknesses, the medical scientists and
communities should design appropriate radiation
irradiators, and use the optimized doses in
preventing the miserable sicknesses
38 Profile of the authors (I)
W.L. Chen Ph. D. Director, Department of Medical Radiation Technology, National Yang-ming University Head, Radiation Protection Department of AEC, and former Head, Health Physics Division of INER
Y.C. Luan Senior Scientist and Manager of Radiation Protection, NUSTA consultant to NBC Society, and former Manager, Radioactive Waste Management Plant and Manager, Cobalt-60 Irradiation Plant of INER, AEC
M.C. Shieh Ph. D. General Secretary, NUSTA Professor of National Chung-Kung University, and former Manager, Uranium Conversion Project of INER, AEC
S.T. Chen MS Senior Scientist and Head, Nuclear Reactor Engineering, NUSTA, and former Director, Nuclear Engineering Division of INER, AEC
H.T. Kung MS Senior Scientist and Nuclear Material Manager, NUSTA, and former Manager, Nuclear Fuel Fabrication Plant of INER, AEC
39 Profile of the authors (II)
K.L. Soong Ph. D. Senior Scientist, NUSTA, and former Senior Scientist and Leading Scientist, Geology and Mineralogy Research Project of INER, AEC
Y. C. Yeh Ph. D. Secretary General, Chinese Nuclear Society Senior Scientist, NUSTA, and former Director, Analysis Center of INER, AEC
T.S. Chou Ph. D. Head, Radiation Research Group, NBC Society Professor of Feng Chia University, and former Head, Chemical Engineering Division of INER, AEC
S. H. Mong MS Head, Protection Research Group, NBC Society former NBC consultant to Saudi Arabia, and Commandant, Army NBC School, Taiwan
J.T. Wu M.D. Biology Consultant, NBC Protection Society, Taiwan Professor of Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Utah, USA, and Medical Director, Special Chemistry and Reagent Development Laboratory at ARUP
40 Profile of the authors (III)
C.P. Sun Ph. D. Board member of NBC Protection Society, and Associated Professor of Social Risk Analysis, National Chiao-Tung University.
W.P. Deng Ph. D. Associated Professor, Biological Material Institute, Taipei Medical University. And former Associated Professor, Graduate Institute of Biological Material, Harvard University, USA.
F.M. Wu Ph. D. Professor of Pathology and Director of Animal Testing Center, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University, Taipei
M.L. Shen Ph. D Professor, Biometry Division, Department of Agronomy, National Taiwan University, Taipei